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Sunday, October 24, 2010

Is Christianity a Crutch? (Matt 5:1-16)

This week we continue Jesus’ famous Sermon on the Mount with the section popularly known as the Beatitudes. What does Jesus mean when he says that those who live out these statements will be blessed? But, can anyone really live this out? And what do the Beatitudes have to do with Christian Spirituality?

Saturday, October 23, 2010

All Hallows Eve Party

Join us this Friday, Oct 29 for our second annual All Hallows Eve Party! There will be good music, great food and drink, with plenty of friends old and new. Plus we're doing COSTUMES - so you've got an excuse for dressing up if you like! :-)

This year we're all pitching in, potluck style. Please bring:
a) your favorite Italian dish / side / dessert -OR-
b) your favorite beer / wine / beverage of choice

We'd welcome your carved pumpkins for out back on the deck; we'll planning on hanging out until at least midnight around the fire (so musical instruments, scotch, and cigars are all welcome too!). Kids are welcome. Friends are too. You can stay as late as you'd like!

Please RSVP on facebook if you're planning on coming!

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Congregational Meeting (Mark 12:41-44)

Today we incorporated a congregational meeting about our financial situation into our worship service. I was personally moved by the whole service and many who were there said it was worthwhile and helpful. If you are a regular at All Souls and missed it, you should definitely give this a listen. If you are still checking us out, it may give you a glimpse into who we want to be as a community.

Monday, October 11, 2010

The Purpose of Scripture (Psalm 27)

So what's the purpose of Scripture? Not "what's it for?" but rather, "What does it offer us as our purpose for living?" The Christian premise is that you can't actually find a higher purpose anywhere, and that this is actually a sign that this really is God's Word. That's a big claim to be sure! Why not consider it with us...

Thursday, October 7, 2010

The Primordial Tale

Ever wonder why "beauty" is one of our core values here at All Souls?

My new friend Ian - who happens to be an author, musician, and church planter among Muslims in Malaysia, and who will be worshiping with us this Sunday, btw! - offers this answer by sharing his insights into "story" (beauty in the world of words and imagination):
I grew up in Indonesia, came to America when I was 17, imported my childhood sweetheart, married her, did the whole Green Card thing and punched out four kids along the way. After 15 years in the States we headed back to Southeast Asia to dabble in Church Planting among Muslims.

I never went to college or university, but I have written a number of historical novels, dicked around with song-writing and composition, picked up a certificate in audio engineering and worked (briefly) in the film world. I love theology and philosophy, cultures and sociology and everything else - but when I step back from the odds and ends of my life, I realize that all these interests derive from an obsession with story-telling.

I know that in this Post-Whatever-it-is Age all narratives are supposed to be local, unique and special - but that’s a crock. In all the films, books, folk-tales, advertising and Faiths I’ve absorbed, I’ve only ever found two great, opposing narratives in play.

In the first (and by far the most popular!), men must reach out to God by paying the debts for their sins. If God is pleased with their sacrifice, he responds with blessings. The sinner is punished and dies, while the innocent receives the life he deserves.

In the second great narrative (and by far the most primordial!), God reaches out to men and pays the debt for their sins. Those whose debts are cleared then respond to God's sacrifice with gratitude and praise. In this narrative, the innocent one dies for another’s sin, while the one who deserves death receives life.

I am the teller of the Primordial Tale. This is why so often in my stories the truly good, the truly innocent, are overborne by evil and die even for the sake of the killer: this is the most ancient story, the most terrible truth, a shadow of the Beauty so wonderful and terrible that if we spoke it plain the words themselves would tear our voice to tatters...my heart cringes even as I write of such terror; I am able to do so only because I know that the horror of the sacrificed Innocent is so much greater, so much more irreconcilable than I could ever imagine in these feeble tales: if God had not written it first, and hinted in his own Story at its incredible breadth and depth, I would not even know how to dream of so terrible a salvation.

It is the Primordial Story that drives me, that keeps me writing - but if I thought that this Story’s indwelling was only local, unique to me or to the ‘Faithful’, my heart would fail, my pen would fall still. No, it is because I believe in the universality of this Story that I am able to press on.

The Primordial Tale is etched upon every human heart, whether Muslim, Buddhist Secular Humanist or what-have-you. It is written in such a way that the pattern, the rhythm, the inevitable denoument resonates within every spirit, for good or ill.

I am convinced that an audience’s level of resonance is in direct relation to an artist’s faithfulness to the Primordial Story. No matter how symbolic the shadow, no matter how distanced the listener: if the Tale is truly told, if there is excellence intermixed with the flying edges of that terrible Beauty, there will be, there must be a response: horror for everyone -

and then, later, joy for those who live, who did not deserve to.
~ Ian Chris
Sound interesting? We invite you to join us for lunch at our place this Sunday afternoon after worship for an informal lunch with Ian and his family. If you are interested in thinking about how the arts are vital to how we speak of redemption in a secular culture, you won't want to miss it...

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Jesus and the Sermon (Matt 4:12-5:12)

This fall we’re wrestling with how we draw near to God and what better way to do that than to look at Jesus’ most famous sermon on what it means to be a disciple. This is the introduction to the Sermon on the Mount series that Ryan will be preaching on over the next several months.